No;—there had been no strife
with the heavenly messenger. As a child falls
asleep in its mother’s arms, so fell Mrs. Montgomery
asleep in the arms of an angel—tranquil,
peaceful, happy. I say happy—for in
lapsing away into that mortal sleep, of which our
natural sleep is but an image, shall the world-weary
who have in trial and suffering grown heavenly minded,
sink into unconsciousness with less of tranquil delight
than the babe pillowed against its mother’s
bosom? I think not.
As I gazed upon her dead face, where
the parting soul had left its sign of peace, I prayed
that, when I passed from my labors, there might be
as few stains of earth upon my garments.
“Blessed are the dead who die
in the Lord, Yea, saith the Spirit, for they rest
from their labors, and their works do follow them.”
I found myself repeating these holy
words, as I stood looking at the white, shrunken features
of the departed.
It was not until the next day that
I saw Blanche. But Constance was with her immediately
after the sad news jarred upon her sympathizing heart.
“How did you leave her?”
was my anxious query, on meeting my wife at home.
“Calm,” was the brief answer.
How much the word included!
“Did you talk with her?”
“Not a great deal; she did not
seem inclined to talk, like some who seek relief through
expression. I found her alone in the room next
to the one in which the body of her mother was lying.
She was sitting by a table, with one hand pressed
over her eyes, as I entered. ‘Oh, my friend!
my dear friend!’ she said, in a tone of grief,
rising and coming a step or two to meet me. I
drew my arms around her, and she laid her head against
me and sobbed three or four times, while the tears
ran down and dropped upon the floor. ’It
is well with her!’ I said.
“‘Oh, yes, my friend,
it is well with her,’ she answered, mournfully,
’well with her, but not with me. How shall
I walk onward in life’s difficult ways, without
my mother’s arm to lean upon? My steps
already hesitate.’
“‘You have another arm
to lean upon,’ I ventured to suggest.
“’Yes, a strong arm upon
which I can lean in unfaltering trust. In this
God has been good to me. But my wise, patient
mother—how shall I live without her?’
“‘She is only removed
from you as to bodily presence,’ said I.
’Love conjoins your souls as intimately as ever.’
“’Ah, yes, I know this
must be. Too many times have I heard that comforting
truth from her lips ever to forget it. But while
we are in the body, the mind will not rest satisfied
with any thing less than bodily presence.’
“I did not press the point,
for I knew that in all sorrow the heart is its own
best comforter, and gathers for itself themes of consolation
that even the nearest friend would fail to suggest.
We went in together to look at the frail tabernacle
from which the pure spirit of her mother had departed
forever! How sweetly the smile left upon the
lips in the last kiss of parting, lingered there still,
fixed in human marble with more than a sculptor’s
art! There was no passionate weeping, as we stood
by the lifeless clay. Very calm and silent she
was; but oh, what a look of intense love went out
from her sad eyes! Not despairing but hopeful
love. The curtain of death hid from her no land
of shadows and mystery; but a world of spiritual realities.
Her mother had not gone shrinking and trembling into
regions of darkness and doubt; but in the blessed assurance
of a peaceful reception in the house of her friends.
“How a true faith,” said
I, strongly impressed by the images which were presented
to my mind, “strips from death its old terrors!
When the Apostle exclaimed, ’Oh, grave, where
is thy victory? oh, death, where is thy sting?’
his mind looked deeper into the mystery of dying,
and saw farther into the world beyond, than do our
modern Christians, who frighten us with images of
terror. ’I will lay me down in peace and
sleep,’ when the time of my departure comes,
should be the heart-language of every one who takes
upon himself the name of Him who said, ’In my
Father’s house are many mansions. I go
to prepare a place for you, that where I am, ye may
be also.’”
“Since I knew Mrs. Montgomery,
and felt the sphere of her quality,” said Constance,
“my perceptions of life and duty here, and their
connection with life and happiness hereafter, have
been elevated to a higher region. I see no longer
as in a glass darkly, but in the light of reason,
made clear by the more interior light of Revelation.”
“And the same is true with me,”
I replied. “We may well say that it was
good to have known her. She was so true, so just,
so unconscious of self, that truth, justice, and unselfishness
were always lovelier in your eyes for having seen
them illustrated in her person. And there was
no pious cant about her. No parade of her unworthiness;
no solemn aspects, nor obtrusive writings of bitter
things against herself. But always an effort
to repress what was evil in her nature; and a state
of quiet, religious trust, which said, ’I know
in whom I have believed.’”
“Ah,” said Constance,
“if there was only more of such religion in
the world!”
“It would be a happier world than it is,”
I answered.
“By the impress of a life like
hers, what lasting good is done!” said my wife.
“Such are the salt of the earth. Cities
set upon hills. Lights in candlesticks.
They live not in vain!’”
I did not see Blanche until the day
of burial. Her beautiful face was calm, but very
pale. It bore strongly the impress of sorrow,
but not of that hopeless sorrow which we so often
see on these mournful occasions. It was very
plain that her thoughts were not lingering around
the shrouded and coffined form of what was once her
mother’s body, but were following her into the
world beyond our mortal vision, as we follow a dear
friend who has gone from us on a long journey.
And thus it was that Blanche Montgomery
entered upon her new life. Death’s shadow
fell upon the torch of Hymen. There was a rain
of grief just as the sun of love poured forth his
brightest beams, and the bow which spanned the horizon
gave, in that hour of grief, sweet promise for the
future.
These exciting events in the experience
of our young friends had come upon us so suddenly,
that our minds were half bewildered. A few weeks
served, however, to bring all things into a right adjustment
with our own daily life and thought, and Ivy Cottage
became one of the places that grew dearer to us for
the accumulating memories of pleasant hours spent
there with true-hearted ones who were living for something
more than the unreal things of this world.
How many times was the life that beat
so feverishly in the Allen House, and that which moved
to such even pulsings in Ivy Cottage, contrasted in
my observation! Ten years of a marriage such as
Delia Floyd so unwisely consummated, had not served
for the development of her inner life to any right
purpose. She had kept on in the wrong way taken
by her feet in the beginning, growing purse proud,
vain, ambitious of external pre-eminence, worldly-minded,
and self-indulgent. She had four children, who
were given up almost wholly to the care of hirelings.
There was, consequent upon neglect, ignorance, and
bad regimen, a great deal of sickness among them, and
I was frequently called in to interpose my skill for
their relief. Poor little suffering ones! how
often I pitied them An occasional warning was thrown
in, but it was scarcely heeded by the mother, who
had put on towards me a reserved stateliness, that
precluded all friendly remonstrance.
At least two months of every summer
Mrs. Dewey was absent from S——,
intermitting between Saratoga and Newport, where she
abandoned herself to all the excitements of fashionable
dissipation. Regularly each year we saw her name
in the New York correspondence of the Herald, as the
“fascinating Mrs. D——;”
the “charming wife of Mr. D——;”
or in some like style of reference. At last, coupled
with one of these allusions, was an intimation that
“it might be well if some discreet friend would
whisper in the lady’s ear that she was a little
too intimate with men of doubtful reputation; particularly
in the absence of her husband.”
This paragraph was pointed out to
me by one of my patients. I read it with a throb
of pain. A little while afterwards I passed Mr.
Floyd and Mr. Dewey in the street. They were walking
rapidly, and conversing in an excited manner.
I saw them take the direction of the depot.
“Here is trouble!” I said,
sighing to myself. “Trouble that gold cannot
gild, nor the sparkle of diamonds hide. Alas!
alas! that a human soul, in which was so fair a promise,
should get so far astray!”
I met Mr. Floyd half an hour later.
His face was pale and troubled, and his eyes upon
the ground. He did not see me—or care
to see me—and so we passed without recognition.
Before night the little warning sentence,
written by the Saratoga correspondent, was running
from lip to lip all over S——. Some
pitied, some blamed, and not a few were glad in their
hearts of the disgrace; for Mrs. Dewey had so carried
herself among us as to destroy all friendly feeling.
There was an expectant pause for several
days. Then it was noised through the town that
Mr. Dewey had returned, bringing his wife home with
him. I met him in the street on the day after.
There was a heavy cloud on his brow. Various
rumors were afloat. One was—it came
from a person just arrived from Saratoga—that
Mr. Dewey surprised his wife in a moonlight walk with
a young man for whom he had no particular fancy, and
under such lover-like relations, that he took the
liberty of caning the gentleman on the spot. Great
excitement followed. The young man resisted—Mrs.
Dewey screamed in terror—people flocked
to the place—and mortifying exposure followed.
This story was in part corroborated by the following
paragraph in the Herald’s Saratoga correspondence:
“We had a spicy scene, a little
out of the regular performance, last evening; no less
than the caning of a New York sprig of fashion, who
made himself rather more agreeable to a certain married
lady who dashes about here in a queenly way than was
agreeable to her husband. The affair was hushed
up. This morning I missed the lady from her usual
place at the breakfast-table. Later in the day
I learned that her husband had taken her home.
If he’ll accept my advice, he will keep her
there.”
“Poor Mrs. Floyd!” It
was the mother’s deep sorrow and humiliation
that touched the heart of my Constance when this disgraceful
exposure reached her. “She has worn to me
a troubled look for this long while,” she added.
“The handsome new house which the Squire built,
and into which they moved last year, has not, with
all its elegant accompaniments, made her any more
cheerful than she was before. Mrs. Dean told
me that her sister was very much opposed to leaving
her old home; but the Squire has grown rich so fast
that he must have everything in the external to correspond
with his improved circumstances. Ah me!
If, with riches, troubles so deep must come, give
me poverty as a blessing.”
A week passed, and no one that I happened
to meet knew, certainly, whether Mrs. Dewey was at
home or not. Then she suddenly made her appearance
riding about in her stylish carriage, and looking as
self-assured as of old.
“That was a strange story about
Mrs. Dewey,” said I to a lady whom I was visiting
professionally. I knew her to be of Mrs. Dewey’s
set. Don’t smile, reader; we had risen
to the dignity of having a fashionable “set,”
in S——, and Mrs. Dewey was the leader.
The lady shrugged her shoulders, drew
up her eyebrows, and looked knowing and mysterious.
I had expected this, for I knew my subject very well.
“You were at Saratoga,”
I added; “and must know whether rumor has exaggerated
her conduct.”
“Well, Doctor,” said the
lady, dropping her voice, and putting on the air of
one who spoke in confidence. “I must say
that our friend was not as discreet as she might have
been. Nothing wrong—that is, criminal—of
course. But the truth is, she is too fond of
admiration, and encourages the attentions of young
men a great deal more than is discreet for any married
woman.”
“There was an actual rencontre
between Mr. Dewey and a person he thought too familiar
with his wife?” said I.
“Oh, yes. Why, it was in the newspapers!”
“How was it made up between the parties?”
“It isn’t made up at all,
I believe; There’s been some talk of a duel.”
“A sad affair,” said I.
“How could Mrs. Dewey have been so thoughtless?”
“She isn’t prudent, by
any means,” answered this intimate friend.
“I often look at the way she conducts herself
at public places, and wonder at her folly.”
“Folly, indeed, if her conduct
strikes at the root of domestic happiness.”
The lady shook her head in a quiet, meaning way.
I waited for her to put her thoughts
into words, which she did in a few moments after this
fashion:
“There’s not much domestic
happiness to spoil, Doctor, so far as I can see.
I don’t think she cares a farthing for her husband;
and he seems to have his mind so full of grand business
schemes as to have no place left for the image of
his wife. At least, so I read him.”
“How has this matter affected
their relation one to the other?”
“I have not seen them together
since her return, and therefore cannot speak from
actual observation,” she replied.
There was nothing very definite in
all this, yet it revealed such an utter abandonment
of life’s best hopes—such a desolation
of love’s pleasant land—such a dark
future for one who might have been so nobly blest
in a true marriage union, that I turned from the theme
with a sad heart.